Literature DB >> 33324017

Interaction of SN Ib 2004dk with a Previously Expelled Envelope.

David Pooley1,2, J Craig Wheeler3, Jozsef Vinkó3,4,5, Vikram V Dwarkadas6, Tamas Szalai4,5, Jeffrey M Silverman3,7, Madelaine Griesel1, Molly McCullough1, G H Marion3, Phillip MacQueen3.   

Abstract

The interaction between the expanding supernova (SN) ejecta with the circumstellar material (CSM) that was expelled from the progenitor prior to explosion is a long-sought phenomenon, yet observational evidence is scarce. Here we confirm a new example: SN 2004dk, originally a hydrogen-poor, helium-rich Type Ib SN that reappeared as a strong Hα-emitting point source on narrowband Hα images. We present follow-up optical spectroscopy that reveals the presence of a broad Hα component with full width at half maximum of ~ 290 km s-1 in addition to the narrow Hα+[N ii] emission features from the host galaxy. Such a broad component is a clear sign of an ejecta-CSM interaction. We also present observations with the XMM-Newton Observatory, the Swift satellite, and the Chandra X-ray Observatory that span 10 days to 15 years after discovery. The detection of strong radio, X-ray, and Hα emission years after explosion allows various constraints to be put on pre-SN mass-loss processes. We present a wind-bubble model in which the CSM is "pre-prepared" by a fast wind interacting with a slow wind. Much of the outer density profile into which the SN explodes corresponds to no steady-state mass-loss process. We estimate that the shell of compressed slow wind material was ejected ~1400 yr prior to explosion, perhaps during carbon burning, and that the SN shock had swept up about 0.04 M ⊙ of material. The region emitting the Hα has a density of order 10-20 g cm-3.

Entities:  

Keywords:  circumstellar matter; supernovae: individual (2004dk)

Year:  2019        PMID: 33324017      PMCID: PMC7735322          DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/ab3e36

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Astrophys J        ISSN: 0004-637X            Impact factor:   5.874


  3 in total

1.  Asphericity in supernova explosions from late-time spectroscopy.

Authors:  Keiichi Maeda; Koji Kawabata; Paolo A Mazzali; Masaomi Tanaka; Stefano Valenti; Ken'ichi Nomoto; Takashi Hattori; Jinsong Deng; Elena Pian; Stefan Taubenberger; Masanori Iye; Thomas Matheson; Alexei V Filippenko; Kentaro Aoki; George Kosugi; Youichi Ohyama; Toshiyuki Sasaki; Tadafumi Takata
Journal:  Science       Date:  2008-01-31       Impact factor: 47.728

2.  X-ray emission from SN 2012ca: A Type Ia-CSM supernova explosion in a dense surrounding medium.

Authors:  Christopher D Bochenek; Vikram V Dwarkadas; Jeffrey M Silverman; Ori D Fox; Roger A Chevalier; Nathan Smith; Alexei V Filippenko
Journal:  Mon Not R Astron Soc       Date:  2017-08-23       Impact factor: 5.287

3.  PTF 11kx: a type Ia supernova with a symbiotic nova progenitor.

Authors:  B Dilday; D A Howell; S B Cenko; J M Silverman; P E Nugent; M Sullivan; S Ben-Ami; L Bildsten; M Bolte; M Endl; A V Filippenko; O Gnat; A Horesh; E Hsiao; M M Kasliwal; D Kirkman; K Maguire; G W Marcy; K Moore; Y Pan; J T Parrent; P Podsiadlowski; R M Quimby; A Sternberg; N Suzuki; D R Tytler; D Xu; J S Bloom; A Gal-Yam; I M Hook; S R Kulkarni; N M Law; E O Ofek; D Polishook; D Poznanski
Journal:  Science       Date:  2012-08-24       Impact factor: 47.728

  3 in total

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